â[view in browser](=)â The Business Iâd Do In a Recession⦠It's no secret that the world is becoming a tougher place. Here's a biz I would run to stay alive... â Weâve got a big week planned for you here at Contrarian Thinking, your indie alternative newsletter for all things M&A and investing (even if itâs âjustâ your local laundromat down the street). Are you prepared for a worsening recession? If not, you need to build streams of passive income. Diversification is our friend, that's why we created our [Cashflow premium membership](. If you're looking to level up your cashflow using self-storage businesses, RV parks, and more, then this is for you... [Explore Our Premium Community](
--------------------------------------------------------------- Today in 10 minutes or less, youâll get: - Mental Model: High ROI to low a** pain
- A systems engineer who was burnt out at his 9-to-5 job, and then thumbed through a copy of Rich Dad Poor Dadâ¦
- Who started buying up rental properties while building his corporate escape routeâ¦
- Who then gave his two weeks and scaled up a portfolio of 155 rental units under managementâ¦
- And ten years later; has $2.5+ million in AYR, 700+ units, and a team of 22 people --------------------------------------------------------------- MENTAL MODEL Lost decades: Before you do any deal the first question is⦠what is the downside? The world is getting rough. The recession is largely here, as is inflation, and will most likely worsen. Weâve really only experienced short recessions a la 2008 where we had a v-shaped recovery. Basically, it went down fast and come up fast. But thatâs not always the way. Look at the period from 1977-1999: â That is 10 years of negative returns or largely flat markets. Over the coming weeks, we are going to talk about investment context. Given what is coming, what's the best way to prepare? What if the worst happens? The idea today is one that can weather down markets, because we are here to free humans, not to get rich quick. We are here to become owners, not to speculate. We are here for you. Buckle up. This oneâs got your back. â â --------------------------------------------------------------- PETER'S STORY So youâve probably heard my spiel about property management before. You start with one, then youâre obsessed and start collecting them like Pokémon cards on the playground. There are A LOT of reasons to love getting into this kind of biz. - You can scoop up properties and renovate them on the weekends, all while working a regular job.
- Rentâs always due on the first with minimal upkeep once your unit is rented out.
- Itâs easy to scale with the right software to manage contracts, payments, and maintenance requests. HOWEVER - it can be a nightmare to run these things if you are unorganized and donât have the right processes. This is where Peter comes in, he was an engineer, but weâll get to that later. Peter had "The American Dream", or so they say. Back in 2008, he was working his engineering job. Heâd worked his whole life to get there. But then plans changed. It all started when he picked up a copy of Rich Dad Poor Dad. A few pages in, he saw that the true path to financial freedom was in cash flowing. Not just from a salary or golden handcuffs. Assets. â[Peter]() took to Google and learned that in Columbus, Ohio, (where he lives) there werenât a lot of property management companies. Bingo. So that same year, Peter bought his first single-family foreclosure using conventional bank loans with plans to scale. He was contracted to pay 20% in interest and used the years of savings heâd built up from his engineering job for the down payment. But then he ran out of cash shortly afterward. He didnât have enough money to keep buying property after property himself. So he decided to become the defacto middleman between investors who were buying properties and renters who were looking for homes. â Image source: [Twitter]()â Part of the appeal of this kind of business comes down to making consistent income. Back in 2013, Peter was pocketing $100 a month per unit (so ~$15.5k a month at the time). Before he hired a team, his overhead looked like ~$1,500 per month plus whatever heâd decided to pay himself. INSIDER TIP - Hereâs how to find your first few rental properties: - Do a hell of a lot of networking - head over to [Meetup]() and search for real estate investing groups in your area or get active on the [Bigger Pockets]( forums
- Get resourceful AF on social media - Your first property could be a tweet away. If youâve built up a professional network over the years, youâll probably have more luck sending a DM to a contact than putting in a random bid somewhere.
- Invest in Google Ads - even a small ad spend of ~$300 a month will drive traffic to your site if it is highly localized. Iâm not saying Peter has all the answers, but the guy was a systems engineer. Systems + Engineer = the opposite of Codieâs unorganized chaos. The biggest hurdle to running your own property management company is the systems. But if you want to see them even more tightly broken down (and maybe even steal them)⦠[youâre going to want to click here](=). A few notes from his playbook on how to manage rental units without making your head explode: - Lean on software to make your life easier - Peterâs got one âCanât Live Withoutâ when it comes to computer-y things that make managing rental properties easier. [Buildium](=) is a property management software that helps you streamline all the paperwork things (think rental agreements, maintenance requests, and payments) all in one place.
- Rule of three - Every time you do something that has more than 3 steps, more than 3 times, you document it. Peterâs notion document is a thing of beauty. Every question answered, every process outlined, every plumber and landscaper listed and ready to call.
- Be an 11/10 with your people management skills - One thing I see people get wrong about rentals is that they think itâs about getting good at managing the units. Itâs not. This is a people business. You need to have a sixth sense when it comes to people. Or you need to build out a checklist of what makes great vendors and renters in your world. Peter documented his questionnaire to figure out who he really wants to work with.
- Play the middle when it comes to rental quality - Peter says this last part is true in Ohio, but my guess is itâs actually true pretty much anywhere youâre looking to get into rentals. Basically, your tenants want cheap rent and a lot of improvements to the property. The rental owner wants high rent and little to no improvements. The trick is to be the middle manâfind a rent price that fits with your ideal tenant and make (reasonable) renovations to your property. â I donât want you to get caught up in the dollars, because owning a business like this is still a lot of hard work BUT it cashflows. Image source: [Twitter]()â If I were going to get into building up or buying a big rental property management company, here are a few ways Iâd hack it: - Elevate your ideal tenant by partnering with a local realtor you trust. Itâs a win-win scenario for you. Realtors want their tenants to find a great property, so theyâll score more future clients through referrals. You want tenants who are high-quality, wonât complain, and wonât damage your property. A realtor can sniff these out for you (instead of finding randos from Craigslist).
- Double down on scaling out your systems. After all, nothing you do for a rental property should ever take you longer than 10 minutes. Sending over a client contract? 3 mins or less. Filing a maintenance request? 30 seconds tops. If youâre not into being in your inbox, then having systems in place to manage the day-to-day is the key to getting sh*t done without taking up a ton of time.
- Give back. You can also work with local agencies to help you source tenants that are in need of housing assistance and a safe place to live (think: leaving a domestic abuse situation). If youâre into this, you can find an agency that will (usually) fund the security deposit and the first few months of rent in scenarios like this.
- Steal his systems. Weâre doing something interesting for the first time and partnering with Peter on his systems too. More on this below... TLDR If youâre still working a full-time job and playing the investment long game, getting into rental property management could be your key to cash flowing. And before you hit reply and tell me this is a bat sh*t crazy idea because of the R-word (recession), hear me out. The economy is gonna do what itâs gonna do. It goes down, it comes back up again. This is the way it works. We know this. But thatâs why buying then building a business is so important. In an economy like the one weâre getting into, you can build up some steady (dare I say safe-ish?) investments that could also equal some cash flow on the side, even if youâre still working full-time. Now I wanna know, what Q's do you have about investing in real estate like this? Hit reply to this email and then hit me with your questions and Iâll add it to my list to ask Peter for a future YouTube video. --------------------------------------------------------------- SPONSORED Be like Peter, in half the time: If you like Peterâs story and think property management might be for youâ¦keep reading. Listen, weâre big fans of not recreating the wheel. This is why we are actually partnering with Peter to bring youâ¦[property management in a box](=). Aka, heâs shared all of the processes, all of the playbooks, all of the operational detailsâ¦combined it with a communityâ¦and is offering it specially to readers of Contrarian Thinking. So if youâve always wanted to run your own PM company like Peter (psâ¦he was able to take four weeks off (no phone, no email), and the business succeeded without him), dive in a bit more⦠[Explore PM in a Box]()
--------------------------------------------------------------- CONTRARIAN FINDS F*** mainstream media, read these instead: Top 3 places to buy businesses: â[Flippa](=) - For the best online businesses and curated deals sent to you daily, weekly or monthly, [sign up](=) for Flippaâs âThe Dealâ newsletter! â[BizBuySell]( - Terrible UI, awful colors, crap to sort through BUT the biggest spot for buying businesses. â[Loopnet]( - Also horrendous to anyone who even marginally likes design, but great for buying mobile homes or RV parks. --------------------------------------------------------------- CONTRARIAN EXTRAS The Not So Boring Section: - Kanye Quest - Looks like Kanye West is [buying Parler](, a conservative social media platform.
- Grocery Juggernaut - The [multi-billion $ merger]() of Kroger and Albertsons may change grocery shopping forever.
- Persistent Pain - The IRS is [adjusting tax brackets](=) due to inflation. Until then? Cheers to cash flow, my friend. Codie & Contrarian Crew Written by Kendall Cherry, Codie Sanchez. Edited by the Contrarian team. --------------------------------------------------------------- â Share Contrarian Thinking, Win Cool Stuff! Invite friends - get free stuff.
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â[ð²Do Better]()â --------------------------------------------------------------- âDisclaimer â This is the âBe an adultâ section. Everything mentioned above isnât advice, just a recount of what I did. That said: This article is presented for informational purposes only. The opinions stated here are not intended to recommend any investment or provide tax advice. Neither are they an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to purchase an interest in any current or future investment vehicle managed or sponsored by Codie Ventures, LLC or its affiliates. All material presented in this newsletter is not to be regarded as investment advice, but for general informational purposes only. Day trading and investing do involve risk, so caution must always be utilized. We cannot guarantee profits or freedom from loss. You assume the entire cost and risk. You are solely responsible for making your own investment decisions. We recommend consulting with a registered investment advisor, broker-dealer, and/or financial advisor. If you choose to invest with or without seeking advice from such an advisor or entity, then any consequences resulting from your investments are your sole responsibility. By reading/sharing this newsletter or consuming our content on our other channels, you are indicating your consent and agreement to our disclaimer. â â [Twitter]( [Website]( [Instagram]( [LinkedIn]() Make us sad and [Unsubscribe]( from all communications| [Update your profile]( | 113 Cherry St #92768, Seattle, WA 98104-2205 WANT MORE CONTRARIAN? - ð« Join [a community]( ð« for cashflowing, freethinking millionaires.
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